Biomimetic surface structuring using cylindrical vector femtosecond laser beams
Evangelos Skoulas, Alexandra Manousaki, Costas Fotakis, Emmanuel, Stratakis

TL;DR
This paper introduces a scalable, single-step laser fabrication method using cylindrical vector femtosecond beams to create complex, biomimetic surface structures with potential applications in superhydrophobic and multi-directional surfaces.
Contribution
The study demonstrates a novel laser processing technique utilizing cylindrical vector femtosecond beams for highly controllable, complex surface structuring that surpasses traditional linear polarization methods.
Findings
Able to produce multi-scale, biomimetic surface structures on nickel
Generated structures inspired by shark skin and lotus leaf morphology
Superior versatility and control compared to linear polarization laser processing
Abstract
We report on a new, single-step and scalable method to fabricate highly ordered, multi-directional and complex surface structures that mimic the unique morphological features of certain species found in nature. Biomimetic surface structuring was realized by exploiting the unique and versatile angular profile and the electric field symmetry of cylindrical vector (CV) femtosecond (fs) laser beams. It is shown that, highly controllable, periodic structures exhibiting sizes at nano-, micro- and dual-scale micro and nano scales can be directly written on Ni upon line and large area scanning with radial and azimuthal polarization beams. Depending on the irradiation conditions, new complex multi-directional nanostructures, inspired by the Shark skin morphology, as well as superhydrophobic dual-scale structures mimicking the Lotus leaf water repellent properties can be attained. It is concluded…
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